Love, Sex, and Drugs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Love, Sex, and Drugs. Summary. Psychoactive drugs lower inhibitions and are used to enhance sexual activity. Initially, some drugs may increase sensation, but continued use can diminish sexual performance and pleasure. Lowered inhibitions sometimes lead to high risk sexual practices.

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The limited effect of erectile dysfunction drugs emphasizes the complexity of human sexuality. Our desire for friendship, affection, love, intimacy, and sex is a primary driving force in men and women, and drugs affect that primary force in many different and complicated ways.

Some psychoactive drugs, such as alcohol, marijuana, and ecstasy lower inhibitions.

Others, including cocaine, amphetamines, marijuana, and some inhalants are used to intensify and otherwise alter the physical sensations of sexuality and counter low self-esteem or shyness.

Often psychoactive drugs substitute a simple physical sensation or the illusion of one, for more complex emotions, such as desire for intimacy and comfort, love of children, or release from anxiety.

Drugs have an impact, both desired and undesired, on all phases of sexual behavior from puberty, through dating, to intimacy in marriage.

Drinking a glass or two of wine to get in the mood, lighting up a cigarette after sex, using a popper to intensify an erection and orgasm, amphetamines to delay ejaculation, marijuana to enhance the newness of a situation, or ecstasy to increase empathy are evidence that drugs are desirable to a wide range of ages and cultures, particularly when shyness, lack of confidence, aging, or physical changes have diminished one’s desire and abilities.

Regular drug users often combine sex and drugs to lower their inhibitions, improve their performance, and increase their fantasies.

Some people use drugs not only to enhance their sexuality but also to shield themselves from their sexuality or from emotional involvement.

“As a teenager I was sort of shy, and the meth made me feel like I was supersmart, superpretty, a superperson. At that age I felt very awkward and uncomfortable without the drug.” –Recovering meth user

Alcohol’s physical affects on sexual functioning are closely related to blood alcohol levels. Its mental effects, however, have more to do with the user’s psychological makeup and the setting in which it is used. rather than the amount consumed.

Even though many women report that alcohol use increases sexual pleasure, quantitative measures of physical sexual arousal and ability to have an orgasm decrease when blood alcohol levels increase.

In one study of female chronic alcoholics, 36% said they had orgasms less than 5% of the time. The study also found that sexual dysfunction was the best predictor of continued problems with alcohol abuse.

Even a few drinks lowers testosterone levels. A long term male drinker has decreased testosterone and an increase in female sex steroids, such as estradiol, and abnormalities in sex steroid metabolism.

Initially, alcohol gives men more confidence because it acts on the area of the brain that regulates fight, fright, and fear, thereby promoting aggressiveness.

As alcoholism progresses many men feel less sexual. A study reports impotence in 60% of heavy alcohol users.

Cocaine and amphetamines increase the supply of dopamine and norepinephrine in the nervous system, inducing a rush of pleasure by affecting centers in the brain involved with sexual activity mostly in the limbic system. The difference in the two drugs is the duration of action.

Methamphetamine lasts hours longer than cocaine and prolongs the stimulation.

Initial feelings can be so pleasurable to methamphetamines users that they begin to depend on the drug to enjoy sex. Continued use can then start the cycle of sexual dysfunction.

Some users believe the crack cocaine enhances sexual pleasure, but in fact, particularly in women, it has been shown to induce a loss of sexual pleasure.

Heavy or prolonged use of cocaine in men often causes a decrease in sexual desire, difficult achieving an erection, and delayed ejaculation.

Pre-existing sexual proclivities are directly related to the effect and the effectiveness of drug use on sex. Someone who is usually shy or sexually inhibited will often get a boost of confidence from cocaine or methamphetamines. Someone who has unusual sexual practices will be more likely to intensify those behaviors under the influence of these drugs.

Physically, nicotine can both stimulate and relax, depending on the set(mood and mental state) and the setting(location).

One survey found that adolescents who smoke are more likely to participate in risky behaviors, such a multiple partners, during their teen years, than those who don’t smoke.

Long term tobacco use has been associated with lower testosterone levels and erectile dysfunction in men and reduced fertility in women, although not nearly to the degree caused by excessive cocaine of alcohol use.

Downers are often used to lower inhibitions, though the physiological depressive effects often decrease performance and eventually desire.

Long term heroin users reported impaired performance and a decrease in sexual drive. With continued use, some users became disinterested in sex and others wanted to repeat the experience of early use.

The overall rate of impotence in one study of male addicts was 39%, jumping to 53% when the subjects were actually high.

Reduced testosterone in men led to impotence in some, while long term female users reported menstrual irregularities, frigidity, and reduced fertility. This is due to inhibition of gonadotropin releasing hormone, a neurohormone that regulates the tests and ovaries.

Many sedatives, such as the benzodiazepines, barbiturates, and street Quaaludes, have been called “alcohol in pill form” and touted as sexual enhancers. They do lower inhibitions and make the user feel more relaxed, but they also induce physical depression that lowers the ability to perform or respond sexually.

With abuse of sedative-hypnotics comes sexual dysfunction and total apathy toward sexual stimulation.

Most of the short acting sedative-hypnotics also cause amnesia, such as Rohypnol. Sexual predators count on the fact that the victims they seduce and rape will have no memory of the event or the perpetrator.

Rohypnol(or Flunitrazepam) causes profound amnesia and lowered inhibitions as well as decreased ability to resist a sexual assault.

It produces a half life of 16 to 35 hours, which enables it to accumulate in the system if taken on a regular basis. Though it is not as toxic as barbiturates, it can be dangerous when used with alcohol.

Rohypnol is legal in some countries, but not in the United States. Due to an increase in knowledge and awareness of the drug it has been reformulated with a blue dye that releases when in contact with liquid, making it harder to slip into drinks.

Mephedrone is also known as MCAT and meow-meow. It is a synthetic variant of cathinone, the active ingredient in khat shrub. It produces similar effect to ecstasy, cocaine, or methamphetamines. It is marketed in the United States as a bath salt.

PCP is not usually associated with sex, but because it is an anesthetic it has been used to deaden the pain of some unusual sex practices.

LSD’s psychedelic like effects are so confusing to the senses that it is not considered a sexual enhancer.

1 in every 3 women in the United States will be a victim of sexual violence in her lifetime. In one study of sexual assaults, victims reported using drugs or alcohol in 51% of the cases; substance use by the assailants was found in 44% of the cases.

In most cases the male user already had tendencies toward improper or aggressive behavior, and the alcohol or other drug served as a trigger

Sexual abuse and domestic violence create the kind of trauma and emotional pain that can lead to the reckless use of drugs and alcohol.

AIDS is fatal because HIV destroys the immune system, making it impossible for the body to fight off serious illnesses. Usually death occurs from a combination of many diseases and infections.

IV use of a drug bypasses all of the body’s natural defenses, such as body hairs, mucous membranes, body acids, and enzymes; and once contracted, HIV destroys the body’s last line of defense.

Worldwide there were an estimated 33.3 million people living with HIV/AIDS in 2009. More than two-thirds live in sub-Saharan Africa and 2.6 million are newly infected each year. However, the rate of infections is going down slowly.